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Translator Puts Us Closer To Dolphin Communication Screenshot-sm 179

LordStormes sent in a link to an article about a new device that may allow dolphins to finally thank us for all the fish. Denise Herzing, founder of the Wild Dolphin Project and Thad Starner, an artificial intelligence researcher at the Georgia Institute of Technology in Atlanta, have been working on a project called Cetacean Hearing and Telemetry or CHAT. The pair hope that CHAT will allow them to "co-create" a language with wild dolphins, allowing the two species to communicate. From the article: "Herzing and Starner will start testing the system on wild Atlantic spotted dolphins (Stenella frontalis) in the middle of this year. At first, divers will play back one of eight 'words' coined by the team to mean 'seaweed' or 'bow wave ride,' for example. The software will listen to see if the dolphins mimic them. Once the system can recognize these mimicked words, the idea is to use it to crack a much harder problem: listening to natural dolphin sounds and pulling out salient features that may be the 'fundamental units' of dolphin communication."

Comment Re:Read the article (Score 1, Troll) 185

Read the question. I wasn't questioning who they were, I was questioning their expertise. In my book, people who do not have a solution for a problem can hardly be considered experts in the problem. Any idiot can say "abandon in place." It takes no special knowledge.

Comment Re:Macs will be a closed platform in the end (Score 0) 517

Apple makes its profits primarily on hardware sales. And it's mostly standard Intel hardware. Why would they care if you decided to put Debian on it? How could they stop you? Of course, that raises the question of why you are buying such expensive hardware just to run Debian since you don't like Apple's Software, but some people are willing to pay extra for industrial design.

Comment Re:Huh? (Score 1) 1075

Samba has switched to GPL v3. Past editions used GPL v2. Thus large chunks of the code are already multilicensed. You are correct that the GPLv2 does not require all publications to accept later licenses, only that that is an option if so chosen by the authors. The Samba authors have chosen to use at least one later version of the license. This is an interesting question actually,if the original authors have chosen to move up to a new version of the license and somebody makes modifications to an earlier revision under the earlier version of the license, are the modifications barred from being incorporated into a new version controlled by the original authors if the original license did not specify that later licenses may be used?

Comment Re:Huh? (Score 1) 1075

Hmm, how so? GPLv2 says that it can be used under that license or any later version. If the community wants Apple's patches and Apple cares to give them back, then they can. They will probably be advised by their lawyers not to though for fear of confusion. Look, it's in a GPLv2 and a GPLv3 project! Suddenly version control timestamps become very important.
Open Source

Android Devices Are Hives of License Violations 299

inkscapee writes "Android developers are paying little attention to Free/Open Source software licenses and have a 71% violation rate. Come on folks, FOSS licenses are easy to comply with, certainly easier than proprietary software licenses, and less punitive. But it seems even the tiny hoops that FOSS requires are too much for devs eager to cash in."
News

Physicists Build Bigger 'Bottles' For Antimatter 119

intellitech writes "Once regarded as the stuff of science fiction, antimatter — the mirror image of the ordinary matter in our observable universe — is now the focus of laboratory studies around the world. While physicists routinely produce antimatter with radioisotopes and particle colliders, cooling these antiparticles and containing them for any length of time is another story. Clifford Surko, a professor of physics at UC San Diego, who is constructing what he hopes will be the world's largest antimatter container, said physicists have recently developed new methods to make special states of antimatter in which they can create large clouds of antiparticles, compress them and make specially tailored beams for a variety of uses."
Education

BitTorrent and Khan Academy To Distribute Education 139

drDugan writes "BitTorrent, Inc. announced this morning that they have launched a partnership with the Khan Academy to distribute open education videos. They launched with more than 2,000 videos, covering high school and college level curriculum, across science, math, history, finance and test prep. All of the videos are free to download and open licensed with Creative Commons."

Comment Missing Options (Score 3, Interesting) 471

I draw the lines at enslaving full human clones, lobotomizing them, or denying them human rights. Deliberately creating anencephalic clones for spare parts is fine. Creating chimaeras or hybrid clones is ok, I guess, but weird. In most cases there's no real point to that. Do we really want to create a race of mermen who can breathe through gills? Why? We have robots who don't need to breathe at all and don't demand rights or paychecks (yet). Other than that I'd be fine with cloning if only the techniques were more efficient. 4000 failures to one clone does not seem like a mature process to me. And we don't really need more people on this planet, so it's doubly inefficient.
Cloud

China Building City For Cloud Computing 142

CWmike writes "First it was China's 'big hole' sighting that brought us the supercomputing race. Now China is building a city-sized cloud computing and office complex that will include a mega data center, one of the projects fueling that country's double-digit growth in IT spending. The entire complex will cover some 6.2 million square feet, with the initial data center space accounting for approximately 646,000 square feet, says IBM, which is collaborating with a Chinese company to build it. A Sputnik moment? Patrick Thibodeau reports that these big projects, whether supercomputers or sprawling software development office parks, can garner a lot of attention. But China's overall level of IT spending, while growing rapidly, is only one-fifth that of the US."
AI

RoboEarth Teaches Robots to Learn From Peers 97

mikejuk writes "A world wide web for robots? It sounds like a crazy idea, but it could mean that once a task is learned, any robot can find out how to do it just by asking RoboEarth. From the article: 'It's not quite war-ready, but a new Skynet-like initiative called RoboEarth could have you reaching for your guide to automaton Armageddon sooner than you think. The network, which is dubbed the "World Wide Web for robots," was designed by a team of European scientists and engineers to allow robots to learn from the experience of their peers, thus enabling them to take on tasks that they weren't necessarily programmed to perform. Using a database with intranet and internet functionality, the system collects and stores information about object recognition, navigation, and tasks and transmits the data to robots linked to the network. Basically, it teaches machines to learn without human intervention.'"

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